"You don't have any understanding of money and the concept of what it brings. There were people who came along who I did not know before and have not been in my life since.

"At the time, you just want everybody to like you. The money did bring problems with my family, and friends as well. It just became too much to cope with."

Callie Rogers from Cockermouth in Cumbria in 2013 when she was pregnant with twins (Image: Sunday Mirror)

She moved of her foster parents' home into a new £180,000 house.

Now a mum-of-three in a happy relationship, she said: "Not knowing who liked me for me, and having all the stress of all the money, I just wanted to go back to having a normal life. I still struggle with trust issues."

Callie now wants the lottery age limit to be raised (Image: Press Association)

Before hitting the jackpot she was earning £3.60 an hour as a Co-op checkout girl in Cockermouth, Cumbria.

Within weeks she met Nicky Lawson, father of her eldest two children, and had moved out to be with him.

She quit work and splashed out on designer clothes, lavish presents for her biological parents and holidays, spending quarter of a million pounds on cocaine.

Callie holding her winning cheque aloft (Image: Press Association)

"So-called mates would come over until the early hours to party," she recalled in 2013.

"Suddenly, I was a local celeb and people would come up to me in pubs and I felt pressure to buy them all drinks. For so long, I drifted with no aims."

She moved to Workington, Cumbria with her fireman partner Paul Penny, and son Blake, who has cerebral palsy, settling down with a steady job.

Callie with her then-boyfriend Paul Penny (Image: Sunday Mirror)

Camelot said they gave 'extensive advice and support' to Callie as they take their duty of care 'very seriously'.

"She did not take up independent financial and legal advice offered," said a spokeswoman. "However, our winners' team helped her to handle the media interest."

Callie has admitted she struggled with her winnings (Image: ITV)

Callie's case isn't the only Lotto winner whose life spiralled out of control following a big win.

'Lotto lout' Michael Carroll won £9.7m in November 2002 aged just 19.

He proclaimed himself 'King of the Chavs'. In 2006, the BBC reported that he was almost broke, having spent his fortune on new homes, drugs, parties, jewellery and cars.

Callie has had twins (Image: Sunday Mirror)

"I only started to think about three things - drugs, sex and gold," Carroll previously admitted.

"The dealer who introduced me to crack has more of my lotto money than I do."

In 2010 he applied for his old job as a binman but said he had no regrets how he splashed his winnings.

Jane Park, Britain's youngest lottery winner at the time, threatened to sue EuroMillions claiming the win ruined her life.

Lottery winner Michael Carroll also blew his fortune after a win aged 19

Jane was just 17 when she bagged £1million in prize money after buying her first ever ticket.

Speaking to the Sunday People , she said: “I have material things but apart from that my life is empty. What is my purpose in life?”

"I thought it would make [my life] ten times better but it’s made it ten times worse."

She was once snapped shopping for a Mercedes, despite facing a possible drink-driving ban.

Euromillions winner Jane Park (Image: Internet Unknown)

She treated herself to a £25,000 BMW, a £17,000 VW Beetle and a £18,000 Range Rover customised in purple in honour of her football heroes Hibernian.

She splashed out £4,500 on a boob job, lip fillers and Botox.

Anyone over the age of 16 can play the National Lottery. But the age limit was agreed at the launch of the game in 1994, and not set by Camelot.